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published:09 Jun 2017

views:28576

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy typing service for legal, academic and professional businesses. Legal Records Transcriptionist has significant years of experience in offering high quality hearings transcription services to various law firms, attorneys, and others from legal fraternity. Legal Records Transcriptionist has developed a hearings transcription team to cater to your entire outsource hearings transcription services requirements. Hence, we have been able to deliver services of superior quality and in a time bound manner. You can outsource hearings transcription services requirements to our hearings transcription team with full confidence, as you are fully assured of service quality, top most accuracy and considerable reduction in cost

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-written note in the truck Saipov drove that pledged allegiance to ISIS.
The Democrats’ Senate leader, N.Y.Sen. Chuck Schumer helped create the diversity visa program which reportedly provided a green card to the Islamic immigrant who allegedly killed eight New Yorkers on October 31. The diversity visa program was created in 1990 by then-Rep. Schumer in response to Irish lobbies in his New York district. Twenty-seven years later, it annually awards 50,000 visas by annual lottery to entrants from around the world, ensuring a cascade of subsequent chain-migrants.
Donald Trump has vowed to put an end to the aforementioned program and also “chain migration” which allows the family of a person already in the United States to get accelerated legal immigration into the United States.
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New York terror attack: Sayfullo Saipov carried out truck rampage in name of ISIS, officials say - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/11/01/new-york-attack-probe-expands-to-uzbekistan-as-possible-militant-links-explored/?utm_term=.fe5c3476ae03
8 killed as truck plows into pedestrians in downtown NYC terror attack | New York Post
http://nypost.com/2017/10/31/several-people-shot-in-downtown-manhattan/
NY Sen. Schumer Created Diversity Visas Which Invited Alleged Killer to NY - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/10/31/sen-schumer-created-diversity-visa-halloween-truck-driver/
Eight Dead After Truck Driver Runs Down Pedestrians in NYC - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2017/10/31/report-multiple-wounded-in-downtown-nyc-after-driver-shoots-pedestrians-from-ca/
Uzbeki man living in Brooklyn pleads guilty in plot to aid ISIS - NY Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/uzbek-man-living-brooklyn-pleads-guilty-plot-aid-isis-article-1.3452434
Three men from Brooklyn arrested, charged with supporting ISIS - CBSNews
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fbi-arrests-three-men-from-brooklyn-for-allegedly-supporting-isis/
Trump Supports Plan to Cut LegalImmigration by Half - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/us/politics/trump-immigration.html
Koran blocks in Oslo, Norway - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUhbjujqHyw
New York terror suspect planned attack for weeks, police say - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/01/us/new-york-attack/index.html

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
For latest breaking news, other top stories log on to: http://www.abplive.in & http://www.youtube.com/abpnewsTV

Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan (USi/ʊz.ˈbɛk.ɪ.ˌstæn/, UK/ʊz.ˌbɛk.ɪ.ˈstɑːn/), officially the Republic of Uzbekistan (Uzbek: Oʻzbekiston Respublikasi/Ўзбекистон Республикаси), is a doubly landlocked country in Central Asia. It is a unitary, constitutional, presidential republic, comprising 12 provinces, 1 autonomous republic, and 1 capital city. Uzbekistan is bordered by five countries: Kazakhstan to the north; Tajikistan to the southeast; Kyrgyzstan to the northeast; Afghanistan to the south; and Turkmenistan to the southwest.

Once part of the Turkic Khaganate and later Timurid Empires, the region that today includes the Republic of Uzbekistan was conquered in the early 16th century by Eastern Turkic-speaking nomads. The area was gradually incorporated into the Russian Empire during the 19th century, and in 1924 what is now Uzbekistan became a bordered constituent republic of the Soviet Union, known as the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic (Uzbek SSR). Following the breakup of the Soviet Union, it declared independence as the Republic of Uzbekistan on 31 August 1991 (officially celebrated the following day).

Night Life Of Tashkent- Uzbekistan Night Life ????

0:59

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy typing service for legal, academic and professional businesses. Legal Records Transcriptionist has significant years of experience in offering high quality hearings transcription services to various law firms, attorneys, and others from legal fraternity. Legal Records Transcriptionist has developed a hearings transcription team to cater to your entire outsource hearings transcription services requirements. Hence, we have been able to deliver services of superior quality and in a time bound manner. You can outsource hearings transcription services requirements to our hearings transcription team with full confidence, as you are fully assured of service quality, top most accuracy and considerable reduction in cost

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-written note in the truck Saipov drove that pledged allegiance to ISIS.
The Democrats’ Senate leader, N.Y.Sen. Chuck Schumer helped create the diversity visa program which reportedly provided a green card to the Islamic immigrant who allegedly killed eight New Yorkers on October 31. The diversity visa program was created in 1990 by then-Rep. Schumer in response to Irish lobbies in his New York district. Twenty-seven years later, it annually awards 50,000 visas by annual lottery to entrants from around the world, ensuring a cascade of subsequent chain-migrants.
Donald Trump has vowed to put an end to the aforementioned program and also “chain migration” which allows the family of a person already in the United States to get accelerated legal immigration into the United States.
–––––––––––––––––––––––
EMAIL ME:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/contact/
DONATE:
► https://www.paypal.me/ablogan
► https://www.patreon.com/anthonyblogan
SOCIAL MEDIA:
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► https://www.facebook.com/anthonybrianlogan/
ABL MERCH:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/shop/
–––––––––––––––––––––––
New York terror attack: Sayfullo Saipov carried out truck rampage in name of ISIS, officials say - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/11/01/new-york-attack-probe-expands-to-uzbekistan-as-possible-militant-links-explored/?utm_term=.fe5c3476ae03
8 killed as truck plows into pedestrians in downtown NYC terror attack | New York Post
http://nypost.com/2017/10/31/several-people-shot-in-downtown-manhattan/
NY Sen. Schumer Created Diversity Visas Which Invited Alleged Killer to NY - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/10/31/sen-schumer-created-diversity-visa-halloween-truck-driver/
Eight Dead After Truck Driver Runs Down Pedestrians in NYC - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2017/10/31/report-multiple-wounded-in-downtown-nyc-after-driver-shoots-pedestrians-from-ca/
Uzbeki man living in Brooklyn pleads guilty in plot to aid ISIS - NY Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/uzbek-man-living-brooklyn-pleads-guilty-plot-aid-isis-article-1.3452434
Three men from Brooklyn arrested, charged with supporting ISIS - CBSNews
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fbi-arrests-three-men-from-brooklyn-for-allegedly-supporting-isis/
Trump Supports Plan to Cut LegalImmigration by Half - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/us/politics/trump-immigration.html
Koran blocks in Oslo, Norway - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUhbjujqHyw
New York terror suspect planned attack for weeks, police say - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/01/us/new-york-attack/index.html

1:29

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Prostitutes Back in Town.wmv 【PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP】 PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP

Uzbekistan Prostitutes Back in Town.wmv 【PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP】 PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP

Uzbekistan Prostitutes Back in Town.wmv 【PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP】 PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP

13:40

Sex Racket Unraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murde

Sex Racket Unraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murde

Sex Racket Unraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murde

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
For latest breaking news, other top stories log on to: http://www.abplive.in & http://www.youtube.com/abpnewsTV

7:06

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The study:
https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/findings/
Get involved:
http://www.freetheslaves.net/
Full interview with Kevin Bales:
http://n.pr/1S54uR7
Video researched, written, narrated, and directed by Bryce Plank
Visualization and editing by Robin WestMusic:
"Enter the Maze" by Kevin MacLeod
http://incompetech.com/
"Phife for Life" by Otis McDonald
Script:
Slavery used to look like this, then it evolved into this, and today it looks like this.
In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people living in modern slavery across 167 different countries. They fall into three general categories: children held in the commercial sex trade; adults held in the commercial sex trade; and any other laborer made to work through force, fraud, or coercion.
The trafficking victim often looks like anybody else at work in a mine, on a farm, in a factory. Many are lured by promises of a steady job in another country, only to have their passports confiscated when they arrive. However, many slaves work in their native countries or even the cities where they were born.
According to The Global Slavery Index, these ten countries are home to the most modern slaves. They each suffer from income inequality, discrimination and classism, and entrenched corruption.
Number ten, Indonesia, produces about 35% of the world’s palm oil. The many small palm plantations present an immense challenge to inspectors trying to crack down on child labor. The country’s many islands are also home to tens of thousands of enslaved fisherman trafficked from Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and Cambodia.
Number nine is the Democratic Republic of Congo. 20,000 of the DRC’s more than 870,000 slaves live in one of the most hellish landscapes on the planet, a vast ore mine in the east of the country.
The terrorist group Boko Haram gets overshadowed by ISIS, although it kills more people. When it comes to enslavement, one of its tactics is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans and then force them to join their group if they fail to repay fast enough.
Seventh is Russia. 55% of the slaves there work in construction. Foreigners are lured mainly from nearby Azerbaijan, the “stans,” Ukraine, and North Korea—thanks to this border on the far eastern edge of Russia.
The NorthKorean government is the world’s largest single slaveholder. Not only does it force more than one million of its people to toil in labor camps and other similarly hopeless situations, but it actually loans out some people to work in neighboring China and Russia, then pockets most of their wages. This exploitation generates about $2.3B each year for the Kim Jong-un regime.
The fifth most enslaved country, Uzbekistan, is the world’s sixth largest producer of cotton. It has benefited from forced labor, as the government puts more than 1 million people to work using threats of debt bondage, heavy fines, asset confiscation, and police intimidation.
Slave recruiters in Bangladesh promise poor families that their boys will be given a job, only to be enslaved on a faraway island and beaten to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight. Often, these fish are exported as cat food for our pets. Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death when they are eaten by tigers while searching for firewood.
Third is Pakistan, which has suffered through decades of conflict, terrorism, and displacement—especially along its northwestern border with Afghanistan. Its provinces have not raised the minimum age of marriage, which has allowed the widespread problem of forced and child weddings to continue.
Over 250 million Chinese have migrated within the country to find better opportunities, creating the ideal conditions for human trafficking. Each year, 58 million children are ‘left behind’ as their parents search of work in the China’s many booming cities. Every year, up to 70,000 children fall into forced begging, illegal adoption, and sex slavery.
And number one is India, which has - by far - the most victims of modern slavery. While economic growth has greatly reduced the percentage of its citizens living in poverty, the country’s sheer size still results in more than 270 million Indians living on less than $2/day. It’s unsurprising that inter-generational bonded labor, forced child labor, commercial sexual exploitation, forced begging, forced recruitment into nonstate armed groups, and forced marriage all exist in India.The government has already created many of the laws necessary to fight the epidemic, but the challenge is enforcing those laws and tracking improvements and areas of continued need.

Night Life Of Tashkent- Uzbekistan Night Life ????

published: 09 Jun 2017

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy typing service for legal, academic and professional businesses. Legal Records Transcriptionist has significant years of experience in offering high quality hearings transcription services to various law firms, attorneys, and others from legal fraternity. Legal Records Transcriptionist has developed a hearings transcription team to cater to your entire outsource hearings transcription services requirements. Hence, we have been able to deliver services of superior quality and in a time bound manner. You can outsource hearings transcription services requirements to our hearings transcription team with full confidence, as you are fully...

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-w...

published: 01 Nov 2017

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Prostitutes Back in Town.wmv 【PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP】 PATTAYA PEOPLE MEDIA GROUP

published: 07 Jun 2012

Sex Racket Unraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murde

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
For latest breaking news, other top stories log on to: http://www.abplive.in & http://www.youtube.com/abpnewsTV

published: 27 Nov 2015

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The study:
https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/findings/
Get involved:
http://www.freetheslaves.net/
Full interview with Kevin Bales:
http://n.pr/1S54uR7
Video researched, written, narrated, and directed by Bryce Plank
Visualization and editing by Robin WestMusic:
"Enter the Maze" by Kevin MacLeod
http://incompetech.com/
"Phife for Life" by Otis McDonald
Script:
Slavery used to look like this, then it evolved into this, and today it looks like this.
In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people living in modern slavery across 167 different countries. They fall into three general categories: children held in the commercial sex t...

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy...

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy typing service for legal, academic and professional businesses. Legal Records Transcriptionist has significant years of experience in offering high quality hearings transcription services to various law firms, attorneys, and others from legal fraternity. Legal Records Transcriptionist has developed a hearings transcription team to cater to your entire outsource hearings transcription services requirements. Hence, we have been able to deliver services of superior quality and in a time bound manner. You can outsource hearings transcription services requirements to our hearings transcription team with full confidence, as you are fully assured of service quality, top most accuracy and considerable reduction in cost

visit us at http://www.legaltranscriptionist.co.nr/
LegalRecords Transcriptionist offer a professional and reliable service?. Transcription of audio and copy typing service for legal, academic and professional businesses. Legal Records Transcriptionist has significant years of experience in offering high quality hearings transcription services to various law firms, attorneys, and others from legal fraternity. Legal Records Transcriptionist has developed a hearings transcription team to cater to your entire outsource hearings transcription services requirements. Hence, we have been able to deliver services of superior quality and in a time bound manner. You can outsource hearings transcription services requirements to our hearings transcription team with full confidence, as you are fully assured of service quality, top most accuracy and considerable reduction in cost

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more...

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-written note in the truck Saipov drove that pledged allegiance to ISIS.
The Democrats’ Senate leader, N.Y.Sen. Chuck Schumer helped create the diversity visa program which reportedly provided a green card to the Islamic immigrant who allegedly killed eight New Yorkers on October 31. The diversity visa program was created in 1990 by then-Rep. Schumer in response to Irish lobbies in his New York district. Twenty-seven years later, it annually awards 50,000 visas by annual lottery to entrants from around the world, ensuring a cascade of subsequent chain-migrants.
Donald Trump has vowed to put an end to the aforementioned program and also “chain migration” which allows the family of a person already in the United States to get accelerated legal immigration into the United States.
–––––––––––––––––––––––
EMAIL ME:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/contact/
DONATE:
► https://www.paypal.me/ablogan
► https://www.patreon.com/anthonyblogan
SOCIAL MEDIA:
► http://www.twitter.com/anthonyblogan
► https://www.facebook.com/anthonybrianlogan/
ABL MERCH:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/shop/
–––––––––––––––––––––––
New York terror attack: Sayfullo Saipov carried out truck rampage in name of ISIS, officials say - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/11/01/new-york-attack-probe-expands-to-uzbekistan-as-possible-militant-links-explored/?utm_term=.fe5c3476ae03
8 killed as truck plows into pedestrians in downtown NYC terror attack | New York Post
http://nypost.com/2017/10/31/several-people-shot-in-downtown-manhattan/
NY Sen. Schumer Created Diversity Visas Which Invited Alleged Killer to NY - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/10/31/sen-schumer-created-diversity-visa-halloween-truck-driver/
Eight Dead After Truck Driver Runs Down Pedestrians in NYC - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2017/10/31/report-multiple-wounded-in-downtown-nyc-after-driver-shoots-pedestrians-from-ca/
Uzbeki man living in Brooklyn pleads guilty in plot to aid ISIS - NY Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/uzbek-man-living-brooklyn-pleads-guilty-plot-aid-isis-article-1.3452434
Three men from Brooklyn arrested, charged with supporting ISIS - CBSNews
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fbi-arrests-three-men-from-brooklyn-for-allegedly-supporting-isis/
Trump Supports Plan to Cut LegalImmigration by Half - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/us/politics/trump-immigration.html
Koran blocks in Oslo, Norway - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUhbjujqHyw
New York terror suspect planned attack for weeks, police say - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/01/us/new-york-attack/index.html

Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-written note in the truck Saipov drove that pledged allegiance to ISIS.
The Democrats’ Senate leader, N.Y.Sen. Chuck Schumer helped create the diversity visa program which reportedly provided a green card to the Islamic immigrant who allegedly killed eight New Yorkers on October 31. The diversity visa program was created in 1990 by then-Rep. Schumer in response to Irish lobbies in his New York district. Twenty-seven years later, it annually awards 50,000 visas by annual lottery to entrants from around the world, ensuring a cascade of subsequent chain-migrants.
Donald Trump has vowed to put an end to the aforementioned program and also “chain migration” which allows the family of a person already in the United States to get accelerated legal immigration into the United States.
–––––––––––––––––––––––
EMAIL ME:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/contact/
DONATE:
► https://www.paypal.me/ablogan
► https://www.patreon.com/anthonyblogan
SOCIAL MEDIA:
► http://www.twitter.com/anthonyblogan
► https://www.facebook.com/anthonybrianlogan/
ABL MERCH:
► http://www.anthonyblogan.com/shop/
–––––––––––––––––––––––
New York terror attack: Sayfullo Saipov carried out truck rampage in name of ISIS, officials say - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/11/01/new-york-attack-probe-expands-to-uzbekistan-as-possible-militant-links-explored/?utm_term=.fe5c3476ae03
8 killed as truck plows into pedestrians in downtown NYC terror attack | New York Post
http://nypost.com/2017/10/31/several-people-shot-in-downtown-manhattan/
NY Sen. Schumer Created Diversity Visas Which Invited Alleged Killer to NY - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/10/31/sen-schumer-created-diversity-visa-halloween-truck-driver/
Eight Dead After Truck Driver Runs Down Pedestrians in NYC - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2017/10/31/report-multiple-wounded-in-downtown-nyc-after-driver-shoots-pedestrians-from-ca/
Uzbeki man living in Brooklyn pleads guilty in plot to aid ISIS - NY Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/uzbek-man-living-brooklyn-pleads-guilty-plot-aid-isis-article-1.3452434
Three men from Brooklyn arrested, charged with supporting ISIS - CBSNews
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fbi-arrests-three-men-from-brooklyn-for-allegedly-supporting-isis/
Trump Supports Plan to Cut LegalImmigration by Half - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/us/politics/trump-immigration.html
Koran blocks in Oslo, Norway - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUhbjujqHyw
New York terror suspect planned attack for weeks, police say - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/01/us/new-york-attack/index.html

published:01 Nov 2017

views:11068

back

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
For latest breaking news, other top stories log on to: http://www.abplive.in & http://www.youtube.com/abpnewsTV

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
For latest breaking news, other top stories log on to: http://www.abplive.in & http://www.youtube.com/abpnewsTV

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The st...

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The study:
https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/findings/
Get involved:
http://www.freetheslaves.net/
Full interview with Kevin Bales:
http://n.pr/1S54uR7
Video researched, written, narrated, and directed by Bryce Plank
Visualization and editing by Robin WestMusic:
"Enter the Maze" by Kevin MacLeod
http://incompetech.com/
"Phife for Life" by Otis McDonald
Script:
Slavery used to look like this, then it evolved into this, and today it looks like this.
In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people living in modern slavery across 167 different countries. They fall into three general categories: children held in the commercial sex trade; adults held in the commercial sex trade; and any other laborer made to work through force, fraud, or coercion.
The trafficking victim often looks like anybody else at work in a mine, on a farm, in a factory. Many are lured by promises of a steady job in another country, only to have their passports confiscated when they arrive. However, many slaves work in their native countries or even the cities where they were born.
According to The Global Slavery Index, these ten countries are home to the most modern slaves. They each suffer from income inequality, discrimination and classism, and entrenched corruption.
Number ten, Indonesia, produces about 35% of the world’s palm oil. The many small palm plantations present an immense challenge to inspectors trying to crack down on child labor. The country’s many islands are also home to tens of thousands of enslaved fisherman trafficked from Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and Cambodia.
Number nine is the Democratic Republic of Congo. 20,000 of the DRC’s more than 870,000 slaves live in one of the most hellish landscapes on the planet, a vast ore mine in the east of the country.
The terrorist group Boko Haram gets overshadowed by ISIS, although it kills more people. When it comes to enslavement, one of its tactics is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans and then force them to join their group if they fail to repay fast enough.
Seventh is Russia. 55% of the slaves there work in construction. Foreigners are lured mainly from nearby Azerbaijan, the “stans,” Ukraine, and North Korea—thanks to this border on the far eastern edge of Russia.
The NorthKorean government is the world’s largest single slaveholder. Not only does it force more than one million of its people to toil in labor camps and other similarly hopeless situations, but it actually loans out some people to work in neighboring China and Russia, then pockets most of their wages. This exploitation generates about $2.3B each year for the Kim Jong-un regime.
The fifth most enslaved country, Uzbekistan, is the world’s sixth largest producer of cotton. It has benefited from forced labor, as the government puts more than 1 million people to work using threats of debt bondage, heavy fines, asset confiscation, and police intimidation.
Slave recruiters in Bangladesh promise poor families that their boys will be given a job, only to be enslaved on a faraway island and beaten to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight. Often, these fish are exported as cat food for our pets. Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death when they are eaten by tigers while searching for firewood.
Third is Pakistan, which has suffered through decades of conflict, terrorism, and displacement—especially along its northwestern border with Afghanistan. Its provinces have not raised the minimum age of marriage, which has allowed the widespread problem of forced and child weddings to continue.
Over 250 million Chinese have migrated within the country to find better opportunities, creating the ideal conditions for human trafficking. Each year, 58 million children are ‘left behind’ as their parents search of work in the China’s many booming cities. Every year, up to 70,000 children fall into forced begging, illegal adoption, and sex slavery.
And number one is India, which has - by far - the most victims of modern slavery. While economic growth has greatly reduced the percentage of its citizens living in poverty, the country’s sheer size still results in more than 270 million Indians living on less than $2/day. It’s unsurprising that inter-generational bonded labor, forced child labor, commercial sexual exploitation, forced begging, forced recruitment into nonstate armed groups, and forced marriage all exist in India.The government has already created many of the laws necessary to fight the epidemic, but the challenge is enforcing those laws and tracking improvements and areas of continued need.

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The study:
https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/findings/
Get involved:
http://www.freetheslaves.net/
Full interview with Kevin Bales:
http://n.pr/1S54uR7
Video researched, written, narrated, and directed by Bryce Plank
Visualization and editing by Robin WestMusic:
"Enter the Maze" by Kevin MacLeod
http://incompetech.com/
"Phife for Life" by Otis McDonald
Script:
Slavery used to look like this, then it evolved into this, and today it looks like this.
In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people living in modern slavery across 167 different countries. They fall into three general categories: children held in the commercial sex trade; adults held in the commercial sex trade; and any other laborer made to work through force, fraud, or coercion.
The trafficking victim often looks like anybody else at work in a mine, on a farm, in a factory. Many are lured by promises of a steady job in another country, only to have their passports confiscated when they arrive. However, many slaves work in their native countries or even the cities where they were born.
According to The Global Slavery Index, these ten countries are home to the most modern slaves. They each suffer from income inequality, discrimination and classism, and entrenched corruption.
Number ten, Indonesia, produces about 35% of the world’s palm oil. The many small palm plantations present an immense challenge to inspectors trying to crack down on child labor. The country’s many islands are also home to tens of thousands of enslaved fisherman trafficked from Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and Cambodia.
Number nine is the Democratic Republic of Congo. 20,000 of the DRC’s more than 870,000 slaves live in one of the most hellish landscapes on the planet, a vast ore mine in the east of the country.
The terrorist group Boko Haram gets overshadowed by ISIS, although it kills more people. When it comes to enslavement, one of its tactics is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans and then force them to join their group if they fail to repay fast enough.
Seventh is Russia. 55% of the slaves there work in construction. Foreigners are lured mainly from nearby Azerbaijan, the “stans,” Ukraine, and North Korea—thanks to this border on the far eastern edge of Russia.
The NorthKorean government is the world’s largest single slaveholder. Not only does it force more than one million of its people to toil in labor camps and other similarly hopeless situations, but it actually loans out some people to work in neighboring China and Russia, then pockets most of their wages. This exploitation generates about $2.3B each year for the Kim Jong-un regime.
The fifth most enslaved country, Uzbekistan, is the world’s sixth largest producer of cotton. It has benefited from forced labor, as the government puts more than 1 million people to work using threats of debt bondage, heavy fines, asset confiscation, and police intimidation.
Slave recruiters in Bangladesh promise poor families that their boys will be given a job, only to be enslaved on a faraway island and beaten to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight. Often, these fish are exported as cat food for our pets. Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death when they are eaten by tigers while searching for firewood.
Third is Pakistan, which has suffered through decades of conflict, terrorism, and displacement—especially along its northwestern border with Afghanistan. Its provinces have not raised the minimum age of marriage, which has allowed the widespread problem of forced and child weddings to continue.
Over 250 million Chinese have migrated within the country to find better opportunities, creating the ideal conditions for human trafficking. Each year, 58 million children are ‘left behind’ as their parents search of work in the China’s many booming cities. Every year, up to 70,000 children fall into forced begging, illegal adoption, and sex slavery.
And number one is India, which has - by far - the most victims of modern slavery. While economic growth has greatly reduced the percentage of its citizens living in poverty, the country’s sheer size still results in more than 270 million Indians living on less than $2/day. It’s unsurprising that inter-generational bonded labor, forced child labor, commercial sexual exploitation, forced begging, forced recruitment into nonstate armed groups, and forced marriage all exist in India.The government has already created many of the laws necessary to fight the epidemic, but the challenge is enforcing those laws and tracking improvements and areas of continued need.

Uzbekistan: a travel documentary

After visiting Mongolia last Summer, we decided to explore a little further the Silk Road and picked Uzbekistan as our next destination.
We didn't really know what to expect: different sources gave us different opinions and we were unsure of what it would have been like.
We found a country full of architectural beauty, a lot of tradition, amazing food and colours. Still quite genuine, tourism hasn't spoiled it that much yet ... unfortunately looked like only big groups of people in their 50s/60s are willing to travel to this country.
It is affordable and it is suitable for both solo travellers, women, families and, of course, groups of any age.
Tashkent: it's the capital city and one of the largest cities in Central Asia. Worth a quick stop but don't spend too much time. The gardens an...

published: 11 Jun 2016

Uzbekistan Travel Guide

A TravelGuide to Uzbekistan
If Kyrgyzstan is renowned for its natural beauty, so neighbouring Uzbekistan is famous for its spectacular Silk Road architecture. From Samarkand to Khiva the legacy of the Silk Road and the rule of EmperorTimur is evident in the magnificent mosques, madrassas and caravanserais. My names is Jonny Bealby, I run WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to explain about tourism in Uzbekistan.
As the world’s only landlocked country, surrounded by landlocked countries, Uzbekistan needs things other than traditional beaches to attract the visitor; and it does, in abundance. From Iran to IndiaIslam has given the world some of the most spectacular architecture there is, and nowhere is this more evident than here in Uzbekistan.
The mosques and madrassas of S...

published: 01 Oct 2014

Uzbekistan (Asia) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years of history and contains all the magic of the Silk Road, as well as numerous oriental fairy tales, along with traditional culture, Islamic history and fascinating desert landscapes. Tashkent is the city of Amir Timur, the riding general who established a dynasty. It is a city on the ancient Silk Road, famous in both orient and occident, and having inspired both scholars and poets, plus craftsmen and artists. Modern Tashkent contains wide boulevards and plenty of lush greenery. White storks that symbolize fertility crown the large entrance arcades to the Place Of Independence. Samarqand was the centre of one of the oldest forms of state in Middle Asia, and was located on the Silk Road. Newly introd...

uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!
This video contains information about uzbekistan travel,samarkand, uzbekistan travel guide, uzbekistan travel tips, best place in uzbekistan, things to do in uzbekistan, tourist attractions In uzbekistan.
5. Chorsu Bazaar
Chorsu Bazaar is the traditional bazaar located in the center of the old town of Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.
"Chorsu" is a word from the Persian language, meaning "crossroads" or "four streams".
4. Mohammed AminKhan Madrasah
Located in the historical district Itchan-Kala. It is the largest madrasah, not only in Khiva but in the Central Asia.
Today the building includes a tour agency, hotel, currency exchange offi...

Trip to Uzbekistan Part 1: Tashkent

Bags full of money. Delicious Uzbek plov. Closed museums. And mostly empty, yet meticulously maintained monuments. This is the first part of my trip and details my adventure in Tashkent, which I discovered was a modern, clean, and exceedingly quiet city.

published: 07 Nov 2016

Bukhara, Uzbekistan Travel Guide

Take a tour of Old Bukhara in Uzbekistan -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions travel video series by GeoBeats.
Found in the country of Uzbekistan is the ancient and historic city of Bukhara.
The city was founded over 2,500 years ago and has been undergoing restoration in recent years.
Many of the old buildings in Bukhara were built over 1,000 years ago.
One of the city's largest buildings is the Ark Fortress, the palace of the Emir.
It houses a museum on the amazing, and sometimes bloody, history of the city.
There is also the mausoleum of Ismail Samani, which dates back to the 10th century.
The Char-Minar is the city's singular madrassah, but only one of many wonders here.

published: 01 Nov 2010

Samarkand Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbekistan is one of the famous cities to visit along the silk road in Uzbekistan. It's a beautiful city with a lot of beautiful and ancient structures. Samarkand is a must visit if you are visiting the country of Uzbekistan!
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
==================================...

published: 22 Jan 2018

Travel Guide to Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of the most interesting, pristine and beautiful countries in Asia, offering the adventurous traveller a rich and rewarding destination. My name isJonny Bealby, I founded WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to talk about tourism in Kyrgyzstan.
Although small, Kyrgyzstan is perfectly formed. The Tien Shan – or Mountains of Heaven – that stretch across its length and breadth are lush and green, high and wild, dissected by sweeping steppe lands, primal forests, crystal streams, turquoise lakes and lofty snow-capped peaks. I first rode through here on horseback in 1999 while writing a book and making a Discovery Channel film, and I thought then it really was one of the most beautiful countries I ...

published: 29 Sep 2014

Khiva Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video on KhivaUzbekistan! Khiva was my last stop during my central Asia travel. It's a mysterious and old city with a lot of history. It is one of the main cities along the silk road in central Asia in Uzbekistan. Khiva was one of the most unique places I have ever visited and it was well worth the travel to get there.
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Ma...

published: 06 Feb 2018

Uzbekistan, Tourism

UZBEKISTAN Travel Tips

Thank you for watching my video on travel tips for Uzbekistan! Uzbekistan is an amazing country that is still a bit mysterious to a lot of people. I hope this video sheds some light on what it's like traveling around the country of Uzbekistan as a solo traveler and in general. Feel free to leave an comments or questions down below and I will do my best to answer them ^^
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living...

We are a travel expedition co. handling all operations by own with personal experience of travelling into different part of world.
We offer fixed departure group tours of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. If you want to book a tour. You can contact us via comments.

After visiting Mongolia last Summer, we decided to explore a little further the Silk Road and picked Uzbekistan as our next destination.
We didn't really know what to expect: different sources gave us different opinions and we were unsure of what it would have been like.
We found a country full of architectural beauty, a lot of tradition, amazing food and colours. Still quite genuine, tourism hasn't spoiled it that much yet ... unfortunately looked like only big groups of people in their 50s/60s are willing to travel to this country.
It is affordable and it is suitable for both solo travellers, women, families and, of course, groups of any age.
Tashkent: it's the capital city and one of the largest cities in Central Asia. Worth a quick stop but don't spend too much time. The gardens and parks around the presidential buildings are very enjoyable and well maintained. Near the Chorsu Bazaar is the best part of town both because of the few remaining historical buildings are around, as well as for the market itself.
Samarkand: do not underestimate the distance here if you are on foot. It's truly impressive to stand in front of the Registan and look at the magnificent madrasas. It's indeed one of the most impressive square in the World. But even more impressive and fascinating is the Shah-I-Zinda mausoleum. The Bibi Khanyum Mosque is the third landmark and can't be missed. Two other documents are less appealing (unless you are an archeologist or an historian) but are still worth a visit: the Afrosiab ruins and the Ulug Beg observatory. Samarkand's history starts probably 3 millennia ago. The old Marqand was conquered by Alexander the Great. The it flourished as one of the major trading points along the Silk Road under the Sogdians and the Persians. When the arabs came in the region, it continue flourishing and its grandeur survived also the Mongol invasion. Infact, not long thereafter, it was the capital of the Timurid Empire that dominated Central Asia from Turkey to India at the end of the 14th centuryBukhara: different from Samarkand, Bukhara landmarks are less impressive but the entire historical center has been kept almost intact. People still live in the old town and enjoy the evening at the Lyabi Hauz. Bukhara will also give you a taste not only of the Silk Road, but also of the Great Game. The Ark fortress has impressive walls, but the madrasas here are the most interest. Our favourite has been the Abdullah KhanMadrasa.
Khiva: the old citadel of Khiva (the so-called Ichon Qala) is on the UNESCO World Heritage List. So many monuments are packed within it walls: 2 royal palace, 3 minarets and several mosques and madrasas. Khiva may see a museum for tourists during the day, but in reality has its own soul. You can feel it early morning of after sunset, before the tourists hit the road or by the weddings that took place every day on its streets.
PRACTICAL INFO:
Itinerary: we spent 10 days: 1 day in Tashkent, 2 days in Samarkand, 1.5 in Bukhara, 1.5 day in the Khorzem, 3 in Khiva and 1 day to come back to Tashkent. It gives you ample time. Ex-post, we only made an error to dedicate only one and half day to Bukhara as we were unable to see the monuments in the countryside
Flights: direct flights from London with Uzbekistan Airways. 7 hours for £400 with no flight entertainment
Transport: train is perfect. We had a travel agency (Salom Travel) booking for us the tickets in advance and delivering to our hotel in Tashkent. In addition, you need a tour or a driver to visit the Khorzem fortresses. We also relied on the same agency. We highly recommend Salom Travel
Food: amazing food for max $5 per person. We ate a lot at the kiosks in the various bazaar for much less than that. Everything is very tasteful, not only the meat, but also the vegs, the dumplings and the local spaghetti (nothing to do with Chinese noodles)
Safety: super safe
Locals: extremely friendly. Especially the younger, they will try to exchange a word or two in English. Uzbekistan is very isolated and not many foreigners are around. As result locals have not been westernized. E.g. all women still wear traditional dresses and you won't hear Justin Bibier around but rather Russian songs or Uzber traditional music. Some taxi drivers and ticket officers will try to squeeze a couple of dollars out of you but nothing that will bore you too much

After visiting Mongolia last Summer, we decided to explore a little further the Silk Road and picked Uzbekistan as our next destination.
We didn't really know what to expect: different sources gave us different opinions and we were unsure of what it would have been like.
We found a country full of architectural beauty, a lot of tradition, amazing food and colours. Still quite genuine, tourism hasn't spoiled it that much yet ... unfortunately looked like only big groups of people in their 50s/60s are willing to travel to this country.
It is affordable and it is suitable for both solo travellers, women, families and, of course, groups of any age.
Tashkent: it's the capital city and one of the largest cities in Central Asia. Worth a quick stop but don't spend too much time. The gardens and parks around the presidential buildings are very enjoyable and well maintained. Near the Chorsu Bazaar is the best part of town both because of the few remaining historical buildings are around, as well as for the market itself.
Samarkand: do not underestimate the distance here if you are on foot. It's truly impressive to stand in front of the Registan and look at the magnificent madrasas. It's indeed one of the most impressive square in the World. But even more impressive and fascinating is the Shah-I-Zinda mausoleum. The Bibi Khanyum Mosque is the third landmark and can't be missed. Two other documents are less appealing (unless you are an archeologist or an historian) but are still worth a visit: the Afrosiab ruins and the Ulug Beg observatory. Samarkand's history starts probably 3 millennia ago. The old Marqand was conquered by Alexander the Great. The it flourished as one of the major trading points along the Silk Road under the Sogdians and the Persians. When the arabs came in the region, it continue flourishing and its grandeur survived also the Mongol invasion. Infact, not long thereafter, it was the capital of the Timurid Empire that dominated Central Asia from Turkey to India at the end of the 14th centuryBukhara: different from Samarkand, Bukhara landmarks are less impressive but the entire historical center has been kept almost intact. People still live in the old town and enjoy the evening at the Lyabi Hauz. Bukhara will also give you a taste not only of the Silk Road, but also of the Great Game. The Ark fortress has impressive walls, but the madrasas here are the most interest. Our favourite has been the Abdullah KhanMadrasa.
Khiva: the old citadel of Khiva (the so-called Ichon Qala) is on the UNESCO World Heritage List. So many monuments are packed within it walls: 2 royal palace, 3 minarets and several mosques and madrasas. Khiva may see a museum for tourists during the day, but in reality has its own soul. You can feel it early morning of after sunset, before the tourists hit the road or by the weddings that took place every day on its streets.
PRACTICAL INFO:
Itinerary: we spent 10 days: 1 day in Tashkent, 2 days in Samarkand, 1.5 in Bukhara, 1.5 day in the Khorzem, 3 in Khiva and 1 day to come back to Tashkent. It gives you ample time. Ex-post, we only made an error to dedicate only one and half day to Bukhara as we were unable to see the monuments in the countryside
Flights: direct flights from London with Uzbekistan Airways. 7 hours for £400 with no flight entertainment
Transport: train is perfect. We had a travel agency (Salom Travel) booking for us the tickets in advance and delivering to our hotel in Tashkent. In addition, you need a tour or a driver to visit the Khorzem fortresses. We also relied on the same agency. We highly recommend Salom Travel
Food: amazing food for max $5 per person. We ate a lot at the kiosks in the various bazaar for much less than that. Everything is very tasteful, not only the meat, but also the vegs, the dumplings and the local spaghetti (nothing to do with Chinese noodles)
Safety: super safe
Locals: extremely friendly. Especially the younger, they will try to exchange a word or two in English. Uzbekistan is very isolated and not many foreigners are around. As result locals have not been westernized. E.g. all women still wear traditional dresses and you won't hear Justin Bibier around but rather Russian songs or Uzber traditional music. Some taxi drivers and ticket officers will try to squeeze a couple of dollars out of you but nothing that will bore you too much

A TravelGuide to Uzbekistan
If Kyrgyzstan is renowned for its natural beauty, so neighbouring Uzbekistan is famous for its spectacular Silk Road architecture. From Samarkand to Khiva the legacy of the Silk Road and the rule of EmperorTimur is evident in the magnificent mosques, madrassas and caravanserais. My names is Jonny Bealby, I run WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to explain about tourism in Uzbekistan.
As the world’s only landlocked country, surrounded by landlocked countries, Uzbekistan needs things other than traditional beaches to attract the visitor; and it does, in abundance. From Iran to IndiaIslam has given the world some of the most spectacular architecture there is, and nowhere is this more evident than here in Uzbekistan.
The mosques and madrassas of Samarkand are as exquisite as any buildings anywhere on earth. The old walled town of Khiva, a veritable living museum, is an entire town of imposing buildings echoing history, and in Bukhara – probably the most important of all Silk Road towns – the soft, earth-coloured forts, squares, domes and towers are all guaranteed to carry the visitor back to a very different time.
The capital of Uzbekistan is Tashkent. Formerly the Soviet Union’s fifth largest city, Tashkent is a surprisingly quiet place, with large leafy parks, cafes and some excellent hotel options. But Tashkent is usually only a start or end point on a journey through Uzbekistan. And if you’re travelling overland from Kyrgyzstan and the Ferghana Valley you’ll likely as not first visit Kokand, a former royal khanate, or kingdom, and home to an impressive palace.
But according to Robert Byron, author of The Road to Oxiana, all travellers that venture through Central Asia have one goal in mind, to see the splendours of Samarkand.
Centre of the Universe, Mirror of the world, Garden of the soul, Jewel of the east, Pearl of Islam, Samarkand has had writers and poets waxing lyrical for over two millennia. And for god reason. The Registan, a public square used to hear royal proclamations, is surrounded on three sides by magnificent mosques and madrassas. The huge Bibi Khanym mosques was the largest in the world when built at the end of the 14th century. Emperor Timor’s tomb has exquisite carvings and delicate gold inlay. Ulam Beg’s observatory is fascinating and impressive. And the shar-i-zindar, also known as the street of the dead, is another atmospheric site.
Moving along the Royal Road, perhaps travelling through Shakrizabs and the birth place of Timur, you’ll come to Bukhara. Personally my favourite town in the country, if not the whole region, Bukhara is a sleepy place, easy to walk around and just brimming over with magnificent sites. Probably the most famous is the 150-foot high Kolan minaret, allegedly used in the 19th century by the then ruler, Nazarullah Khan, as a means of execution, and the adjacent mosques and madrassas. Other sites include the Arc, or impregnable citadel, the char minar mosque and the mosque of 40 pillars. Here in Bukhara there is also great shopping, often in the old caravanserais, where carpets, shawls, spice and trinkets of all types can be found.
And finally after another 7 hour drive across the Kyzyl Kum Desert lies Khiva. As one of the most powerful khanates in the 19th century, Khiva grew into a sumptuous walled city much of which has been lovingly restored for the benefit of today’s modern visitor. To watch sunrise over the old town is one of travel’s great experiences.
But it’s not all about ancient monuments. Uzbekistan has some beautiful hills and mountains, the quite extraordinary and fascinating Aral Sea and the famous modern art collection at Nukus. The ancient towns through which you’ll pass also have bustling markets, some great open air restaurants, and some of the best boutique hotels anyway in the region.
Although you might find more tourists here than you will in some of the neighbouring countries, for anyone interested in culture and history Uzbekistan is simply a must.

A TravelGuide to Uzbekistan
If Kyrgyzstan is renowned for its natural beauty, so neighbouring Uzbekistan is famous for its spectacular Silk Road architecture. From Samarkand to Khiva the legacy of the Silk Road and the rule of EmperorTimur is evident in the magnificent mosques, madrassas and caravanserais. My names is Jonny Bealby, I run WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to explain about tourism in Uzbekistan.
As the world’s only landlocked country, surrounded by landlocked countries, Uzbekistan needs things other than traditional beaches to attract the visitor; and it does, in abundance. From Iran to IndiaIslam has given the world some of the most spectacular architecture there is, and nowhere is this more evident than here in Uzbekistan.
The mosques and madrassas of Samarkand are as exquisite as any buildings anywhere on earth. The old walled town of Khiva, a veritable living museum, is an entire town of imposing buildings echoing history, and in Bukhara – probably the most important of all Silk Road towns – the soft, earth-coloured forts, squares, domes and towers are all guaranteed to carry the visitor back to a very different time.
The capital of Uzbekistan is Tashkent. Formerly the Soviet Union’s fifth largest city, Tashkent is a surprisingly quiet place, with large leafy parks, cafes and some excellent hotel options. But Tashkent is usually only a start or end point on a journey through Uzbekistan. And if you’re travelling overland from Kyrgyzstan and the Ferghana Valley you’ll likely as not first visit Kokand, a former royal khanate, or kingdom, and home to an impressive palace.
But according to Robert Byron, author of The Road to Oxiana, all travellers that venture through Central Asia have one goal in mind, to see the splendours of Samarkand.
Centre of the Universe, Mirror of the world, Garden of the soul, Jewel of the east, Pearl of Islam, Samarkand has had writers and poets waxing lyrical for over two millennia. And for god reason. The Registan, a public square used to hear royal proclamations, is surrounded on three sides by magnificent mosques and madrassas. The huge Bibi Khanym mosques was the largest in the world when built at the end of the 14th century. Emperor Timor’s tomb has exquisite carvings and delicate gold inlay. Ulam Beg’s observatory is fascinating and impressive. And the shar-i-zindar, also known as the street of the dead, is another atmospheric site.
Moving along the Royal Road, perhaps travelling through Shakrizabs and the birth place of Timur, you’ll come to Bukhara. Personally my favourite town in the country, if not the whole region, Bukhara is a sleepy place, easy to walk around and just brimming over with magnificent sites. Probably the most famous is the 150-foot high Kolan minaret, allegedly used in the 19th century by the then ruler, Nazarullah Khan, as a means of execution, and the adjacent mosques and madrassas. Other sites include the Arc, or impregnable citadel, the char minar mosque and the mosque of 40 pillars. Here in Bukhara there is also great shopping, often in the old caravanserais, where carpets, shawls, spice and trinkets of all types can be found.
And finally after another 7 hour drive across the Kyzyl Kum Desert lies Khiva. As one of the most powerful khanates in the 19th century, Khiva grew into a sumptuous walled city much of which has been lovingly restored for the benefit of today’s modern visitor. To watch sunrise over the old town is one of travel’s great experiences.
But it’s not all about ancient monuments. Uzbekistan has some beautiful hills and mountains, the quite extraordinary and fascinating Aral Sea and the famous modern art collection at Nukus. The ancient towns through which you’ll pass also have bustling markets, some great open air restaurants, and some of the best boutique hotels anyway in the region.
Although you might find more tourists here than you will in some of the neighbouring countries, for anyone interested in culture and history Uzbekistan is simply a must.

Uzbekistan (Asia) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years of history and contains all the magic of the Silk Road, as well as nu...

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years of history and contains all the magic of the Silk Road, as well as numerous oriental fairy tales, along with traditional culture, Islamic history and fascinating desert landscapes. Tashkent is the city of Amir Timur, the riding general who established a dynasty. It is a city on the ancient Silk Road, famous in both orient and occident, and having inspired both scholars and poets, plus craftsmen and artists. Modern Tashkent contains wide boulevards and plenty of lush greenery. White storks that symbolize fertility crown the large entrance arcades to the Place Of Independence. Samarqand was the centre of one of the oldest forms of state in Middle Asia, and was located on the Silk Road. Newly introduced Timurid style further enriched the architecture. Coloured mosaics of astounding luminosity compete with glazed relief ceramics whose ornamentation is composed of arabesques, font characters and geometrical shapes. Samarqand Bazaar now has a new, modern appearance and the variety of goods on offer has never been better with fresh fruit, vegetables, honey and cheese. The ‘Wild West’ of Uzbekistan is a wonderful region of deserts with just a few yurt camps for overnight accommodation. Qirk Qiz Qala emerges from the middle of the flat, featureless desert. Almost mystically, the final sharp fragments of the castle’s former defensive towers emerge from the ground which consist mainly of gravel and are covered with low saxaul bushes that defy the desert’s strong winds with their deep-reaching roots. The oasis city of Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, and was where mathematician Mohammed, who discovered algebra, once lived. Almost fifteen hundred years of oriental culture are hidden within the intriguing winding streets of this fine oasis city. Uzbekistan has always been at the intersection of major trade and cultural routes and a border between Asia and Europe, between nomads and the Western world. Exoticism mixed with all the magic of the One Thousand And One Nights!
--------------
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Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years of history and contains all the magic of the Silk Road, as well as numerous oriental fairy tales, along with traditional culture, Islamic history and fascinating desert landscapes. Tashkent is the city of Amir Timur, the riding general who established a dynasty. It is a city on the ancient Silk Road, famous in both orient and occident, and having inspired both scholars and poets, plus craftsmen and artists. Modern Tashkent contains wide boulevards and plenty of lush greenery. White storks that symbolize fertility crown the large entrance arcades to the Place Of Independence. Samarqand was the centre of one of the oldest forms of state in Middle Asia, and was located on the Silk Road. Newly introduced Timurid style further enriched the architecture. Coloured mosaics of astounding luminosity compete with glazed relief ceramics whose ornamentation is composed of arabesques, font characters and geometrical shapes. Samarqand Bazaar now has a new, modern appearance and the variety of goods on offer has never been better with fresh fruit, vegetables, honey and cheese. The ‘Wild West’ of Uzbekistan is a wonderful region of deserts with just a few yurt camps for overnight accommodation. Qirk Qiz Qala emerges from the middle of the flat, featureless desert. Almost mystically, the final sharp fragments of the castle’s former defensive towers emerge from the ground which consist mainly of gravel and are covered with low saxaul bushes that defy the desert’s strong winds with their deep-reaching roots. The oasis city of Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, and was where mathematician Mohammed, who discovered algebra, once lived. Almost fifteen hundred years of oriental culture are hidden within the intriguing winding streets of this fine oasis city. Uzbekistan has always been at the intersection of major trade and cultural routes and a border between Asia and Europe, between nomads and the Western world. Exoticism mixed with all the magic of the One Thousand And One Nights!
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
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Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!
This video contains information about uzbekistan travel,samarkand, uzbekistan travel guide, uzbekistan travel tips, best place in uzbekistan, things to do in uzbekistan, tourist attractions In uzbekistan.
5. Chorsu Bazaar
Chorsu Bazaar is the traditional bazaar located in the center of the old town of Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.
"Chorsu" is a word from the Persian language, meaning "crossroads" or "four streams".
4. Mohammed AminKhan Madrasah
Located in the historical district Itchan-Kala. It is the largest madrasah, not only in Khiva but in the Central Asia.
Today the building includes a tour agency, hotel, currency exchange office and cafe.
3. KalyanMinaret
The Kalyan minaret is a minaret of the Po-i-Kalyan mosque complex in Bukhara, Uzbekistan and one of the most prominent landmarks in the city.
The body of the minaret is topped by a rotunda with 16 arched fenestrations, from which the muezzins summoned the Muslims in the city to prayer.
2. Ulugh Beg Observatory
It is an observatory in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, built in the 1420s by the Timurid astronomer Ulugh Beg.
The observatory was destroyed in 1449 and rediscovered in 1908.
1. Registan
The Registan was the heart of the ancient city of Samarkand, Uzbekistan. It is framed by three madrasahs.
The three madrasahs of the Registan are the Ulugh Beg Madrasah, the Tilya-Kori Madrasah and the Sher-Dor Madrasah.
uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!

uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!
This video contains information about uzbekistan travel,samarkand, uzbekistan travel guide, uzbekistan travel tips, best place in uzbekistan, things to do in uzbekistan, tourist attractions In uzbekistan.
5. Chorsu Bazaar
Chorsu Bazaar is the traditional bazaar located in the center of the old town of Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.
"Chorsu" is a word from the Persian language, meaning "crossroads" or "four streams".
4. Mohammed AminKhan Madrasah
Located in the historical district Itchan-Kala. It is the largest madrasah, not only in Khiva but in the Central Asia.
Today the building includes a tour agency, hotel, currency exchange office and cafe.
3. KalyanMinaret
The Kalyan minaret is a minaret of the Po-i-Kalyan mosque complex in Bukhara, Uzbekistan and one of the most prominent landmarks in the city.
The body of the minaret is topped by a rotunda with 16 arched fenestrations, from which the muezzins summoned the Muslims in the city to prayer.
2. Ulugh Beg Observatory
It is an observatory in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, built in the 1420s by the Timurid astronomer Ulugh Beg.
The observatory was destroyed in 1449 and rediscovered in 1908.
1. Registan
The Registan was the heart of the ancient city of Samarkand, Uzbekistan. It is framed by three madrasahs.
The three madrasahs of the Registan are the Ulugh Beg Madrasah, the Tilya-Kori Madrasah and the Sher-Dor Madrasah.
uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!

Travel video about The Heart Of The Ancient Silkroad in Uzbekistan.
Today's Uzbekistan is referred to as the "golden heart" of the AncientSilk Road, a legendary trade route that once linked China with Europe and, at the same time, the centres of Islamic civilization. The capital, Tashkent, was growing too and the city was famous in both Orient and Occident for its scholars, poets and artisans and even today its inhabitants are proud of their legacy which is a combination of Oriental, Russian and Soviet times. Samarqand became integrated within the Persian Empire, was later conquered by Alexander The Great and, in the fourteenth century, became the centre of the World Empire of Amir Timur. Newly introduced Timurid Design further enriched the architecture. Further west, the caravans reached the oasis city of Bukhara, ‘God's blessed city’, on the border of the Kyzylkum Desert. In theMiddle Ages it was one of the most important religious and economic centres of the Islamic world. On the outskirt of the ancient town of Chor Minor is the madrasah of the Four Minarets. All sorts of conventional crafts have been handed down and are still used today. Bukharan rag dolls continue to be manufactured and offered for sale. Returning to the centre, there is a synagogue. In the middle of the nineteenth century, five hundred Jews lived in Chor Minor and beneath the domes of ancient bazaars, trade still continues today. Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, in the west of today’s Uzbekistan, an oriental city in which its greatest minaret, Kalta-Minar, remains unfinished. Ko´Hna Ark, fortress of the Khan, is situated within the city walls. The condemned had to wait for their execution at its entrance. The ancient Silk Road eventually became a tourist route. But the magic of its oriental beauty has survived and its historic monuments enchant even today with the magic of a Thousand and One Nights and all of the eternal charm of the Orient!
--------------
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--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Travel video about The Heart Of The Ancient Silkroad in Uzbekistan.
Today's Uzbekistan is referred to as the "golden heart" of the AncientSilk Road, a legendary trade route that once linked China with Europe and, at the same time, the centres of Islamic civilization. The capital, Tashkent, was growing too and the city was famous in both Orient and Occident for its scholars, poets and artisans and even today its inhabitants are proud of their legacy which is a combination of Oriental, Russian and Soviet times. Samarqand became integrated within the Persian Empire, was later conquered by Alexander The Great and, in the fourteenth century, became the centre of the World Empire of Amir Timur. Newly introduced Timurid Design further enriched the architecture. Further west, the caravans reached the oasis city of Bukhara, ‘God's blessed city’, on the border of the Kyzylkum Desert. In theMiddle Ages it was one of the most important religious and economic centres of the Islamic world. On the outskirt of the ancient town of Chor Minor is the madrasah of the Four Minarets. All sorts of conventional crafts have been handed down and are still used today. Bukharan rag dolls continue to be manufactured and offered for sale. Returning to the centre, there is a synagogue. In the middle of the nineteenth century, five hundred Jews lived in Chor Minor and beneath the domes of ancient bazaars, trade still continues today. Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, in the west of today’s Uzbekistan, an oriental city in which its greatest minaret, Kalta-Minar, remains unfinished. Ko´Hna Ark, fortress of the Khan, is situated within the city walls. The condemned had to wait for their execution at its entrance. The ancient Silk Road eventually became a tourist route. But the magic of its oriental beauty has survived and its historic monuments enchant even today with the magic of a Thousand and One Nights and all of the eternal charm of the Orient!
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Trip to Uzbekistan Part 1: Tashkent

Bags full of money. Delicious Uzbek plov. Closed museums. And mostly empty, yet meticulously maintained monuments. This is the first part of my trip and details...

Bags full of money. Delicious Uzbek plov. Closed museums. And mostly empty, yet meticulously maintained monuments. This is the first part of my trip and details my adventure in Tashkent, which I discovered was a modern, clean, and exceedingly quiet city.

Bags full of money. Delicious Uzbek plov. Closed museums. And mostly empty, yet meticulously maintained monuments. This is the first part of my trip and details my adventure in Tashkent, which I discovered was a modern, clean, and exceedingly quiet city.

Take a tour of Old Bukhara in Uzbekistan -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions travel video series by GeoBeats.
Found in the country of Uzbekistan is the ancient and historic city of Bukhara.
The city was founded over 2,500 years ago and has been undergoing restoration in recent years.
Many of the old buildings in Bukhara were built over 1,000 years ago.
One of the city's largest buildings is the Ark Fortress, the palace of the Emir.
It houses a museum on the amazing, and sometimes bloody, history of the city.
There is also the mausoleum of Ismail Samani, which dates back to the 10th century.
The Char-Minar is the city's singular madrassah, but only one of many wonders here.

Take a tour of Old Bukhara in Uzbekistan -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions travel video series by GeoBeats.
Found in the country of Uzbekistan is the ancient and historic city of Bukhara.
The city was founded over 2,500 years ago and has been undergoing restoration in recent years.
Many of the old buildings in Bukhara were built over 1,000 years ago.
One of the city's largest buildings is the Ark Fortress, the palace of the Emir.
It houses a museum on the amazing, and sometimes bloody, history of the city.
There is also the mausoleum of Ismail Samani, which dates back to the 10th century.
The Char-Minar is the city's singular madrassah, but only one of many wonders here.

Samarkand Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbekistan is one of the famous cities to visit along the silk road in Uzbek...

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbekistan is one of the famous cities to visit along the silk road in Uzbekistan. It's a beautiful city with a lot of beautiful and ancient structures. Samarkand is a must visit if you are visiting the country of Uzbekistan!
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
=========================================================
SUBSCRIBE TO PATMAX ADVENTURES! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuar...
Checkout my last video on TASHKENT UZBEKISTAN!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TByjfwhieg&t=25s
►WEBSITE: http://www.patmaxadventures.com/
►INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/patmaxadventures/
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Music: Lideon Babylon https://soundcloud.com/lideonofficial/babylon
Business inquiries: patrickdagostino86@gmail.com
Recorded with: SonyHDR AS3000 Action Cam

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbekistan is one of the famous cities to visit along the silk road in Uzbekistan. It's a beautiful city with a lot of beautiful and ancient structures. Samarkand is a must visit if you are visiting the country of Uzbekistan!
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
=========================================================
SUBSCRIBE TO PATMAX ADVENTURES! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuar...
Checkout my last video on TASHKENT UZBEKISTAN!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TByjfwhieg&t=25s
►WEBSITE: http://www.patmaxadventures.com/
►INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/patmaxadventures/
►FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Patmax-Adventures-289005804765791/timeline
►GOOGLE+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/103436849...
Music: Lideon Babylon https://soundcloud.com/lideonofficial/babylon
Business inquiries: patrickdagostino86@gmail.com
Recorded with: SonyHDR AS3000 Action Cam

Travel Guide to Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of the most interesting, pristine and beautiful countries in Asia, offering...

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of the most interesting, pristine and beautiful countries in Asia, offering the adventurous traveller a rich and rewarding destination. My name isJonny Bealby, I founded WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to talk about tourism in Kyrgyzstan.
Although small, Kyrgyzstan is perfectly formed. The Tien Shan – or Mountains of Heaven – that stretch across its length and breadth are lush and green, high and wild, dissected by sweeping steppe lands, primal forests, crystal streams, turquoise lakes and lofty snow-capped peaks. I first rode through here on horseback in 1999 while writing a book and making a Discovery Channel film, and I thought then it really was one of the most beautiful countries I had ever visited.
The country is primarily a mountainous land rising in altitude from 400 metres in the Ferghana Valley to over 7,400 metre on the summit of Peak Pobeda. More than half of the country is over 3,000 metres high, while a third is permanently covered in snow. But despite the immense natural beauty of this landlocked Central Asian, Silk Road republic, it is the people themselves that bring Kyrgyzstan to life, and on many of our tours to the country you will stay with local families with whom we have developed special friendships.
So to the country and the main sites you’ll see. Heading east out of the leafy, tree-lined streets of the capital Bishkek – a place renowned for its markets, monuments and excellent museum – you’ll first pass the imposing 11th century Borana Tower, before skirting the edge of Lake Izzy Kul. Here, in the far northeast of the country, you can spend a couple of days on the lake, visit the interesting town of Karakol or head to Karkara MountainCamp for a bit of helicopter assisted glacier trekking, available every year on our Celestial Mountain Action Adventure.
From here you’ll probably move on around the southern shores of the lake, visiting one of the famous eagle hunters, and possibly trek over the one of the many magnificent passes, before hitting the main road south towards China, and one of the last remaining ancient Silk Road caravanserais at Tash Rabat. Here you can go for walks, or ride one of the local’s horses, all the while staying in one of the traditional yurts while Nazira and her family look after you. People often ask me, where is my favourite place in the world – well, this is right up there; sitting on the hills above the valley is one of the most peaceful settings I know.
From here most will either head over the border to China and the famous Silk Road crossroads town of Kashgar or west across the mountains to another jewel in the Kyrgyz crown, Lake Son Kul. A 3,000 metre high glacial lake, some 40 kilometres in length, again it offers a great place to walk or ride among the hills and meet more of the locals.
As you head further west so you can cross the sensational Ferghana range and visit the region around the Tajik border – particularly travelling up to Peak Lenin base camp – or head down into the Ferghana Valley and the ancient Silk Road town of Osh. Many of our trips come this way as they head into neighbouring Uzbekistan, but continuing on the circuit back round towards Bishkek and you come to yet another wonderful region of natural beauty, Sary Chelek National Park.
At Wild Frontiers we run both small group tours and tailor-made holidays to Kyrgyzstan. While some trips focus solely on this country, others take in Kyrgyzstan on longer journeys through this Silk Road region. It’s also the place that we run one of our best horse riding adventures; loosely following the route I took back in 1999, for those interested in equine holidays, this trip is simply sensational.
As you can see, as far as natural mountain beauty is concerned Kyrgyzstan is unrivalled in the region. It is a country with few political issues, a place with good tourist infrastructure and yet relatively few tourist. It’s a place where you can walk, ride, mountain bike, raft or heli-trek – with us, all on a single trip! – and as of 2012 there are no visa requirements for British and many other nationalities.
As I say when I rode through the country 15 years ago, I knew I had discovered a gem…and so it is today. Kyrgyzstan really is one of adventure travels best kept secrets.

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of the most interesting, pristine and beautiful countries in Asia, offering the adventurous traveller a rich and rewarding destination. My name isJonny Bealby, I founded WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to talk about tourism in Kyrgyzstan.
Although small, Kyrgyzstan is perfectly formed. The Tien Shan – or Mountains of Heaven – that stretch across its length and breadth are lush and green, high and wild, dissected by sweeping steppe lands, primal forests, crystal streams, turquoise lakes and lofty snow-capped peaks. I first rode through here on horseback in 1999 while writing a book and making a Discovery Channel film, and I thought then it really was one of the most beautiful countries I had ever visited.
The country is primarily a mountainous land rising in altitude from 400 metres in the Ferghana Valley to over 7,400 metre on the summit of Peak Pobeda. More than half of the country is over 3,000 metres high, while a third is permanently covered in snow. But despite the immense natural beauty of this landlocked Central Asian, Silk Road republic, it is the people themselves that bring Kyrgyzstan to life, and on many of our tours to the country you will stay with local families with whom we have developed special friendships.
So to the country and the main sites you’ll see. Heading east out of the leafy, tree-lined streets of the capital Bishkek – a place renowned for its markets, monuments and excellent museum – you’ll first pass the imposing 11th century Borana Tower, before skirting the edge of Lake Izzy Kul. Here, in the far northeast of the country, you can spend a couple of days on the lake, visit the interesting town of Karakol or head to Karkara MountainCamp for a bit of helicopter assisted glacier trekking, available every year on our Celestial Mountain Action Adventure.
From here you’ll probably move on around the southern shores of the lake, visiting one of the famous eagle hunters, and possibly trek over the one of the many magnificent passes, before hitting the main road south towards China, and one of the last remaining ancient Silk Road caravanserais at Tash Rabat. Here you can go for walks, or ride one of the local’s horses, all the while staying in one of the traditional yurts while Nazira and her family look after you. People often ask me, where is my favourite place in the world – well, this is right up there; sitting on the hills above the valley is one of the most peaceful settings I know.
From here most will either head over the border to China and the famous Silk Road crossroads town of Kashgar or west across the mountains to another jewel in the Kyrgyz crown, Lake Son Kul. A 3,000 metre high glacial lake, some 40 kilometres in length, again it offers a great place to walk or ride among the hills and meet more of the locals.
As you head further west so you can cross the sensational Ferghana range and visit the region around the Tajik border – particularly travelling up to Peak Lenin base camp – or head down into the Ferghana Valley and the ancient Silk Road town of Osh. Many of our trips come this way as they head into neighbouring Uzbekistan, but continuing on the circuit back round towards Bishkek and you come to yet another wonderful region of natural beauty, Sary Chelek National Park.
At Wild Frontiers we run both small group tours and tailor-made holidays to Kyrgyzstan. While some trips focus solely on this country, others take in Kyrgyzstan on longer journeys through this Silk Road region. It’s also the place that we run one of our best horse riding adventures; loosely following the route I took back in 1999, for those interested in equine holidays, this trip is simply sensational.
As you can see, as far as natural mountain beauty is concerned Kyrgyzstan is unrivalled in the region. It is a country with few political issues, a place with good tourist infrastructure and yet relatively few tourist. It’s a place where you can walk, ride, mountain bike, raft or heli-trek – with us, all on a single trip! – and as of 2012 there are no visa requirements for British and many other nationalities.
As I say when I rode through the country 15 years ago, I knew I had discovered a gem…and so it is today. Kyrgyzstan really is one of adventure travels best kept secrets.

Thank you for watching my video on KhivaUzbekistan! Khiva was my last stop during my central Asia travel. It's a mysterious and old city with a lot of history. It is one of the main cities along the silk road in central Asia in Uzbekistan. Khiva was one of the most unique places I have ever visited and it was well worth the travel to get there.
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
=========================================================
SUBSCRIBE TO PATMAX ADVENTURES! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuar...
Checkout my last video on BUKHARA UZBEKISTAN! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaVKrHXyib0
►WEBSITE: http://www.patmaxadventures.com/
►INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/patmaxadventures/
►FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Patmax-Adventures-289005804765791/timeline
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Music: Sommerlat https://soundcloud.com/sommerlat/set-mix-maktub-by-carlos-2
Business inquiries: patrickdagostino86@gmail.com
Recorded with: SonyHDR AS3000 Action Cam

Thank you for watching my video on KhivaUzbekistan! Khiva was my last stop during my central Asia travel. It's a mysterious and old city with a lot of history. It is one of the main cities along the silk road in central Asia in Uzbekistan. Khiva was one of the most unique places I have ever visited and it was well worth the travel to get there.
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
=========================================================
SUBSCRIBE TO PATMAX ADVENTURES! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuar...
Checkout my last video on BUKHARA UZBEKISTAN! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaVKrHXyib0
►WEBSITE: http://www.patmaxadventures.com/
►INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/patmaxadventures/
►FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Patmax-Adventures-289005804765791/timeline
►GOOGLE+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/103436849...
Music: Sommerlat https://soundcloud.com/sommerlat/set-mix-maktub-by-carlos-2
Business inquiries: patrickdagostino86@gmail.com
Recorded with: SonyHDR AS3000 Action Cam

UZBEKISTAN Travel Tips

Thank you for watching my video on travel tips for Uzbekistan! Uzbekistan is an amazing country that is still a bit mysterious to a lot of people. I hope this v...

Thank you for watching my video on travel tips for Uzbekistan! Uzbekistan is an amazing country that is still a bit mysterious to a lot of people. I hope this video sheds some light on what it's like traveling around the country of Uzbekistan as a solo traveler and in general. Feel free to leave an comments or questions down below and I will do my best to answer them ^^
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
STANTOURS: http://www.stantours.com/ca_index.html
=========================================================
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Thank you for watching my video on travel tips for Uzbekistan! Uzbekistan is an amazing country that is still a bit mysterious to a lot of people. I hope this video sheds some light on what it's like traveling around the country of Uzbekistan as a solo traveler and in general. Feel free to leave an comments or questions down below and I will do my best to answer them ^^
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
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We are a travel expedition co. handling all operations by own with personal experience of travelling into different part of world.
We offer fixed departure grou...

We are a travel expedition co. handling all operations by own with personal experience of travelling into different part of world.
We offer fixed departure group tours of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. If you want to book a tour. You can contact us via comments.

We are a travel expedition co. handling all operations by own with personal experience of travelling into different part of world.
We offer fixed departure group tours of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. If you want to book a tour. You can contact us via comments.

Uzbekistan Legal Records Transcriptionist $0.79/min

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Multiple officials have identified the alleged truck driver who mowed down pedestrians Tuesday in lower Manhattan, killing eight and injuring about a dozen more, as 29-year-old Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov. Officials are calling the incident “an act of terror.”
According to many witnesses, Saipov shouted “Allahu Akbar” upon exiting a Patterson, New JerseyHome Depot rental truck after intentionally driving the wrong way on a busy bike lane near the World Trade Center — the site of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil. After striking several people, witnesses say he “crashed deliberately into a school bus carrying at least three children,” CNBC reports. Leaving his vehicle with two imitation guns, he was shot in the abdomen by police, according to NYPD.
Officials later found a hand-written note in the truck Saipov drove that pledged allegiance to ISIS.
The Democrats’ Senate leader, N.Y.Sen. Chuck Schumer helped create the diversity visa program which reportedly provided a green card to the Islamic immigrant who allegedly killed eight New Yorkers on October 31. The diversity visa program was created in 1990 by then-Rep. Schumer in response to Irish lobbies in his New York district. Twenty-seven years later, it annually awards 50,000 visas by annual lottery to entrants from around the world, ensuring a cascade of subsequent chain-migrants.
Donald Trump has vowed to put an end to the aforementioned program and also “chain migration” which allows the family of a person already in the United States to get accelerated legal immigration into the United States.
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New York terror attack: Sayfullo Saipov carried out truck rampage in name of ISIS, officials say - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/11/01/new-york-attack-probe-expands-to-uzbekistan-as-possible-militant-links-explored/?utm_term=.fe5c3476ae03
8 killed as truck plows into pedestrians in downtown NYC terror attack | New York Post
http://nypost.com/2017/10/31/several-people-shot-in-downtown-manhattan/
NY Sen. Schumer Created Diversity Visas Which Invited Alleged Killer to NY - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/10/31/sen-schumer-created-diversity-visa-halloween-truck-driver/
Eight Dead After Truck Driver Runs Down Pedestrians in NYC - Breitbart
http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2017/10/31/report-multiple-wounded-in-downtown-nyc-after-driver-shoots-pedestrians-from-ca/
Uzbeki man living in Brooklyn pleads guilty in plot to aid ISIS - NY Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/uzbek-man-living-brooklyn-pleads-guilty-plot-aid-isis-article-1.3452434
Three men from Brooklyn arrested, charged with supporting ISIS - CBSNews
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fbi-arrests-three-men-from-brooklyn-for-allegedly-supporting-isis/
Trump Supports Plan to Cut LegalImmigration by Half - The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/us/politics/trump-immigration.html
Koran blocks in Oslo, Norway - YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUhbjujqHyw
New York terror suspect planned attack for weeks, police say - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/01/us/new-york-attack/index.html

1:29

The 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of Uzbekistan

Legal foundation of great transformations
On December 7, a solemn event dedicated to the 2...

Sex Racket Unraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murde

Sex RacketUnraveled: Know how cotton girl from Uzbekistan became call girl and then murdered. 22-year-old Shakhunoza Shukurova got caught in the sex racket being run in India. Her family was very poor and she came to India in search of a job. On the pretext of a job, a guy forced her into sex racket and then was murdered too. Know her complete story here.
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7:06

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
S...

10 Countries Most Afflicted By Modern Slavery

The ten countries with the most people in modern slavery (victims of human trafficking).
Subscribe to TDC: https://www.youtube.com/TheDailyConversation/
The study:
https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/findings/
Get involved:
http://www.freetheslaves.net/
Full interview with Kevin Bales:
http://n.pr/1S54uR7
Video researched, written, narrated, and directed by Bryce Plank
Visualization and editing by Robin WestMusic:
"Enter the Maze" by Kevin MacLeod
http://incompetech.com/
"Phife for Life" by Otis McDonald
Script:
Slavery used to look like this, then it evolved into this, and today it looks like this.
In fact, there are an estimated 45.8 million people living in modern slavery across 167 different countries. They fall into three general categories: children held in the commercial sex trade; adults held in the commercial sex trade; and any other laborer made to work through force, fraud, or coercion.
The trafficking victim often looks like anybody else at work in a mine, on a farm, in a factory. Many are lured by promises of a steady job in another country, only to have their passports confiscated when they arrive. However, many slaves work in their native countries or even the cities where they were born.
According to The Global Slavery Index, these ten countries are home to the most modern slaves. They each suffer from income inequality, discrimination and classism, and entrenched corruption.
Number ten, Indonesia, produces about 35% of the world’s palm oil. The many small palm plantations present an immense challenge to inspectors trying to crack down on child labor. The country’s many islands are also home to tens of thousands of enslaved fisherman trafficked from Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and Cambodia.
Number nine is the Democratic Republic of Congo. 20,000 of the DRC’s more than 870,000 slaves live in one of the most hellish landscapes on the planet, a vast ore mine in the east of the country.
The terrorist group Boko Haram gets overshadowed by ISIS, although it kills more people. When it comes to enslavement, one of its tactics is to give Nigerian entrepreneurs loans and then force them to join their group if they fail to repay fast enough.
Seventh is Russia. 55% of the slaves there work in construction. Foreigners are lured mainly from nearby Azerbaijan, the “stans,” Ukraine, and North Korea—thanks to this border on the far eastern edge of Russia.
The NorthKorean government is the world’s largest single slaveholder. Not only does it force more than one million of its people to toil in labor camps and other similarly hopeless situations, but it actually loans out some people to work in neighboring China and Russia, then pockets most of their wages. This exploitation generates about $2.3B each year for the Kim Jong-un regime.
The fifth most enslaved country, Uzbekistan, is the world’s sixth largest producer of cotton. It has benefited from forced labor, as the government puts more than 1 million people to work using threats of debt bondage, heavy fines, asset confiscation, and police intimidation.
Slave recruiters in Bangladesh promise poor families that their boys will be given a job, only to be enslaved on a faraway island and beaten to clean fish for up to 24 hours straight. Often, these fish are exported as cat food for our pets. Sometimes, the boys meet a gruesome death when they are eaten by tigers while searching for firewood.
Third is Pakistan, which has suffered through decades of conflict, terrorism, and displacement—especially along its northwestern border with Afghanistan. Its provinces have not raised the minimum age of marriage, which has allowed the widespread problem of forced and child weddings to continue.
Over 250 million Chinese have migrated within the country to find better opportunities, creating the ideal conditions for human trafficking. Each year, 58 million children are ‘left behind’ as their parents search of work in the China’s many booming cities. Every year, up to 70,000 children fall into forced begging, illegal adoption, and sex slavery.
And number one is India, which has - by far - the most victims of modern slavery. While economic growth has greatly reduced the percentage of its citizens living in poverty, the country’s sheer size still results in more than 270 million Indians living on less than $2/day. It’s unsurprising that inter-generational bonded labor, forced child labor, commercial sexual exploitation, forced begging, forced recruitment into nonstate armed groups, and forced marriage all exist in India.The government has already created many of the laws necessary to fight the epidemic, but the challenge is enforcing those laws and tracking improvements and areas of continued need.

Uzbekistan: a travel documentary

After visiting Mongolia last Summer, we decided to explore a little further the Silk Road and picked Uzbekistan as our next destination.
We didn't really know what to expect: different sources gave us different opinions and we were unsure of what it would have been like.
We found a country full of architectural beauty, a lot of tradition, amazing food and colours. Still quite genuine, tourism hasn't spoiled it that much yet ... unfortunately looked like only big groups of people in their 50s/60s are willing to travel to this country.
It is affordable and it is suitable for both solo travellers, women, families and, of course, groups of any age.
Tashkent: it's the capital city and one of the largest cities in Central Asia. Worth a quick stop but don't spend too much time. The gardens and parks around the presidential buildings are very enjoyable and well maintained. Near the Chorsu Bazaar is the best part of town both because of the few remaining historical buildings are around, as well as for the market itself.
Samarkand: do not underestimate the distance here if you are on foot. It's truly impressive to stand in front of the Registan and look at the magnificent madrasas. It's indeed one of the most impressive square in the World. But even more impressive and fascinating is the Shah-I-Zinda mausoleum. The Bibi Khanyum Mosque is the third landmark and can't be missed. Two other documents are less appealing (unless you are an archeologist or an historian) but are still worth a visit: the Afrosiab ruins and the Ulug Beg observatory. Samarkand's history starts probably 3 millennia ago. The old Marqand was conquered by Alexander the Great. The it flourished as one of the major trading points along the Silk Road under the Sogdians and the Persians. When the arabs came in the region, it continue flourishing and its grandeur survived also the Mongol invasion. Infact, not long thereafter, it was the capital of the Timurid Empire that dominated Central Asia from Turkey to India at the end of the 14th centuryBukhara: different from Samarkand, Bukhara landmarks are less impressive but the entire historical center has been kept almost intact. People still live in the old town and enjoy the evening at the Lyabi Hauz. Bukhara will also give you a taste not only of the Silk Road, but also of the Great Game. The Ark fortress has impressive walls, but the madrasas here are the most interest. Our favourite has been the Abdullah KhanMadrasa.
Khiva: the old citadel of Khiva (the so-called Ichon Qala) is on the UNESCO World Heritage List. So many monuments are packed within it walls: 2 royal palace, 3 minarets and several mosques and madrasas. Khiva may see a museum for tourists during the day, but in reality has its own soul. You can feel it early morning of after sunset, before the tourists hit the road or by the weddings that took place every day on its streets.
PRACTICAL INFO:
Itinerary: we spent 10 days: 1 day in Tashkent, 2 days in Samarkand, 1.5 in Bukhara, 1.5 day in the Khorzem, 3 in Khiva and 1 day to come back to Tashkent. It gives you ample time. Ex-post, we only made an error to dedicate only one and half day to Bukhara as we were unable to see the monuments in the countryside
Flights: direct flights from London with Uzbekistan Airways. 7 hours for £400 with no flight entertainment
Transport: train is perfect. We had a travel agency (Salom Travel) booking for us the tickets in advance and delivering to our hotel in Tashkent. In addition, you need a tour or a driver to visit the Khorzem fortresses. We also relied on the same agency. We highly recommend Salom Travel
Food: amazing food for max $5 per person. We ate a lot at the kiosks in the various bazaar for much less than that. Everything is very tasteful, not only the meat, but also the vegs, the dumplings and the local spaghetti (nothing to do with Chinese noodles)
Safety: super safe
Locals: extremely friendly. Especially the younger, they will try to exchange a word or two in English. Uzbekistan is very isolated and not many foreigners are around. As result locals have not been westernized. E.g. all women still wear traditional dresses and you won't hear Justin Bibier around but rather Russian songs or Uzber traditional music. Some taxi drivers and ticket officers will try to squeeze a couple of dollars out of you but nothing that will bore you too much

4:44

Uzbekistan Travel Guide

A Travel Guide to Uzbekistan
If Kyrgyzstan is renowned for its natural beauty, so neighbo...

Uzbekistan Travel Guide

A TravelGuide to Uzbekistan
If Kyrgyzstan is renowned for its natural beauty, so neighbouring Uzbekistan is famous for its spectacular Silk Road architecture. From Samarkand to Khiva the legacy of the Silk Road and the rule of EmperorTimur is evident in the magnificent mosques, madrassas and caravanserais. My names is Jonny Bealby, I run WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to explain about tourism in Uzbekistan.
As the world’s only landlocked country, surrounded by landlocked countries, Uzbekistan needs things other than traditional beaches to attract the visitor; and it does, in abundance. From Iran to IndiaIslam has given the world some of the most spectacular architecture there is, and nowhere is this more evident than here in Uzbekistan.
The mosques and madrassas of Samarkand are as exquisite as any buildings anywhere on earth. The old walled town of Khiva, a veritable living museum, is an entire town of imposing buildings echoing history, and in Bukhara – probably the most important of all Silk Road towns – the soft, earth-coloured forts, squares, domes and towers are all guaranteed to carry the visitor back to a very different time.
The capital of Uzbekistan is Tashkent. Formerly the Soviet Union’s fifth largest city, Tashkent is a surprisingly quiet place, with large leafy parks, cafes and some excellent hotel options. But Tashkent is usually only a start or end point on a journey through Uzbekistan. And if you’re travelling overland from Kyrgyzstan and the Ferghana Valley you’ll likely as not first visit Kokand, a former royal khanate, or kingdom, and home to an impressive palace.
But according to Robert Byron, author of The Road to Oxiana, all travellers that venture through Central Asia have one goal in mind, to see the splendours of Samarkand.
Centre of the Universe, Mirror of the world, Garden of the soul, Jewel of the east, Pearl of Islam, Samarkand has had writers and poets waxing lyrical for over two millennia. And for god reason. The Registan, a public square used to hear royal proclamations, is surrounded on three sides by magnificent mosques and madrassas. The huge Bibi Khanym mosques was the largest in the world when built at the end of the 14th century. Emperor Timor’s tomb has exquisite carvings and delicate gold inlay. Ulam Beg’s observatory is fascinating and impressive. And the shar-i-zindar, also known as the street of the dead, is another atmospheric site.
Moving along the Royal Road, perhaps travelling through Shakrizabs and the birth place of Timur, you’ll come to Bukhara. Personally my favourite town in the country, if not the whole region, Bukhara is a sleepy place, easy to walk around and just brimming over with magnificent sites. Probably the most famous is the 150-foot high Kolan minaret, allegedly used in the 19th century by the then ruler, Nazarullah Khan, as a means of execution, and the adjacent mosques and madrassas. Other sites include the Arc, or impregnable citadel, the char minar mosque and the mosque of 40 pillars. Here in Bukhara there is also great shopping, often in the old caravanserais, where carpets, shawls, spice and trinkets of all types can be found.
And finally after another 7 hour drive across the Kyzyl Kum Desert lies Khiva. As one of the most powerful khanates in the 19th century, Khiva grew into a sumptuous walled city much of which has been lovingly restored for the benefit of today’s modern visitor. To watch sunrise over the old town is one of travel’s great experiences.
But it’s not all about ancient monuments. Uzbekistan has some beautiful hills and mountains, the quite extraordinary and fascinating Aral Sea and the famous modern art collection at Nukus. The ancient towns through which you’ll pass also have bustling markets, some great open air restaurants, and some of the best boutique hotels anyway in the region.
Although you might find more tourists here than you will in some of the neighbouring countries, for anyone interested in culture and history Uzbekistan is simply a must.

51:31

Uzbekistan (Asia) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years...

Uzbekistan (Asia) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan is a country with thousands of years of history and contains all the magic of the Silk Road, as well as numerous oriental fairy tales, along with traditional culture, Islamic history and fascinating desert landscapes. Tashkent is the city of Amir Timur, the riding general who established a dynasty. It is a city on the ancient Silk Road, famous in both orient and occident, and having inspired both scholars and poets, plus craftsmen and artists. Modern Tashkent contains wide boulevards and plenty of lush greenery. White storks that symbolize fertility crown the large entrance arcades to the Place Of Independence. Samarqand was the centre of one of the oldest forms of state in Middle Asia, and was located on the Silk Road. Newly introduced Timurid style further enriched the architecture. Coloured mosaics of astounding luminosity compete with glazed relief ceramics whose ornamentation is composed of arabesques, font characters and geometrical shapes. Samarqand Bazaar now has a new, modern appearance and the variety of goods on offer has never been better with fresh fruit, vegetables, honey and cheese. The ‘Wild West’ of Uzbekistan is a wonderful region of deserts with just a few yurt camps for overnight accommodation. Qirk Qiz Qala emerges from the middle of the flat, featureless desert. Almost mystically, the final sharp fragments of the castle’s former defensive towers emerge from the ground which consist mainly of gravel and are covered with low saxaul bushes that defy the desert’s strong winds with their deep-reaching roots. The oasis city of Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, and was where mathematician Mohammed, who discovered algebra, once lived. Almost fifteen hundred years of oriental culture are hidden within the intriguing winding streets of this fine oasis city. Uzbekistan has always been at the intersection of major trade and cultural routes and a border between Asia and Europe, between nomads and the Western world. Exoticism mixed with all the magic of the One Thousand And One Nights!
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uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!
This video contains information about uzbekistan travel,samarkand, uzbekistan travel guide, uzbekistan travel tips, best place in uzbekistan, things to do in uzbekistan, tourist attractions In uzbekistan.
5. Chorsu Bazaar
Chorsu Bazaar is the traditional bazaar located in the center of the old town of Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.
"Chorsu" is a word from the Persian language, meaning "crossroads" or "four streams".
4. Mohammed AminKhan Madrasah
Located in the historical district Itchan-Kala. It is the largest madrasah, not only in Khiva but in the Central Asia.
Today the building includes a tour agency, hotel, currency exchange office and cafe.
3. KalyanMinaret
The Kalyan minaret is a minaret of the Po-i-Kalyan mosque complex in Bukhara, Uzbekistan and one of the most prominent landmarks in the city.
The body of the minaret is topped by a rotunda with 16 arched fenestrations, from which the muezzins summoned the Muslims in the city to prayer.
2. Ulugh Beg Observatory
It is an observatory in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, built in the 1420s by the Timurid astronomer Ulugh Beg.
The observatory was destroyed in 1449 and rediscovered in 1908.
1. Registan
The Registan was the heart of the ancient city of Samarkand, Uzbekistan. It is framed by three madrasahs.
The three madrasahs of the Registan are the Ulugh Beg Madrasah, the Tilya-Kori Madrasah and the Sher-Dor Madrasah.
uzbekistan tourism | uzbekistan travel guide | tourist attractions in uzbekistan | top 5 best places to visit in uzbekistan | you must know !!

Travel video about The Heart Of The Ancient Silkroad in Uzbekistan.
Today's Uzbekistan is referred to as the "golden heart" of the AncientSilk Road, a legendary trade route that once linked China with Europe and, at the same time, the centres of Islamic civilization. The capital, Tashkent, was growing too and the city was famous in both Orient and Occident for its scholars, poets and artisans and even today its inhabitants are proud of their legacy which is a combination of Oriental, Russian and Soviet times. Samarqand became integrated within the Persian Empire, was later conquered by Alexander The Great and, in the fourteenth century, became the centre of the World Empire of Amir Timur. Newly introduced Timurid Design further enriched the architecture. Further west, the caravans reached the oasis city of Bukhara, ‘God's blessed city’, on the border of the Kyzylkum Desert. In theMiddle Ages it was one of the most important religious and economic centres of the Islamic world. On the outskirt of the ancient town of Chor Minor is the madrasah of the Four Minarets. All sorts of conventional crafts have been handed down and are still used today. Bukharan rag dolls continue to be manufactured and offered for sale. Returning to the centre, there is a synagogue. In the middle of the nineteenth century, five hundred Jews lived in Chor Minor and beneath the domes of ancient bazaars, trade still continues today. Khiva is one of the greatest centres of ancient Korezm, ‘Land of the sun’, in the west of today’s Uzbekistan, an oriental city in which its greatest minaret, Kalta-Minar, remains unfinished. Ko´Hna Ark, fortress of the Khan, is situated within the city walls. The condemned had to wait for their execution at its entrance. The ancient Silk Road eventually became a tourist route. But the magic of its oriental beauty has survived and its historic monuments enchant even today with the magic of a Thousand and One Nights and all of the eternal charm of the Orient!
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1:10

Uzbekistan Tourist Attractions: 10 Top Places to Visit

Planning to visit Uzbekistan? Check out our Uzbekistan Travel Guide video and see top most...

Trip to Uzbekistan Part 1: Tashkent

Bags full of money. Delicious Uzbek plov. Closed museums. And mostly empty, yet meticulously maintained monuments. This is the first part of my trip and details my adventure in Tashkent, which I discovered was a modern, clean, and exceedingly quiet city.

1:03

Bukhara, Uzbekistan Travel Guide

Take a tour of Old Bukhara in Uzbekistan -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions trave...

Bukhara, Uzbekistan Travel Guide

Take a tour of Old Bukhara in Uzbekistan -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions travel video series by GeoBeats.
Found in the country of Uzbekistan is the ancient and historic city of Bukhara.
The city was founded over 2,500 years ago and has been undergoing restoration in recent years.
Many of the old buildings in Bukhara were built over 1,000 years ago.
One of the city's largest buildings is the Ark Fortress, the palace of the Emir.
It houses a museum on the amazing, and sometimes bloody, history of the city.
There is also the mausoleum of Ismail Samani, which dates back to the 10th century.
The Char-Minar is the city's singular madrassah, but only one of many wonders here.

10:53

Samarkand Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbeki...

Samarkand Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video of traveling around Samarkand Uzbekistan! Samarkand Uzbekistan is one of the famous cities to visit along the silk road in Uzbekistan. It's a beautiful city with a lot of beautiful and ancient structures. Samarkand is a must visit if you are visiting the country of Uzbekistan!
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
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5:09

Travel Guide to Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of th...

Travel Guide to Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan, or the Kyrgyz Republic to give it its official name, is quite simply one of the most interesting, pristine and beautiful countries in Asia, offering the adventurous traveller a rich and rewarding destination. My name isJonny Bealby, I founded WildFrontiers, and in this short film I am going to talk about tourism in Kyrgyzstan.
Although small, Kyrgyzstan is perfectly formed. The Tien Shan – or Mountains of Heaven – that stretch across its length and breadth are lush and green, high and wild, dissected by sweeping steppe lands, primal forests, crystal streams, turquoise lakes and lofty snow-capped peaks. I first rode through here on horseback in 1999 while writing a book and making a Discovery Channel film, and I thought then it really was one of the most beautiful countries I had ever visited.
The country is primarily a mountainous land rising in altitude from 400 metres in the Ferghana Valley to over 7,400 metre on the summit of Peak Pobeda. More than half of the country is over 3,000 metres high, while a third is permanently covered in snow. But despite the immense natural beauty of this landlocked Central Asian, Silk Road republic, it is the people themselves that bring Kyrgyzstan to life, and on many of our tours to the country you will stay with local families with whom we have developed special friendships.
So to the country and the main sites you’ll see. Heading east out of the leafy, tree-lined streets of the capital Bishkek – a place renowned for its markets, monuments and excellent museum – you’ll first pass the imposing 11th century Borana Tower, before skirting the edge of Lake Izzy Kul. Here, in the far northeast of the country, you can spend a couple of days on the lake, visit the interesting town of Karakol or head to Karkara MountainCamp for a bit of helicopter assisted glacier trekking, available every year on our Celestial Mountain Action Adventure.
From here you’ll probably move on around the southern shores of the lake, visiting one of the famous eagle hunters, and possibly trek over the one of the many magnificent passes, before hitting the main road south towards China, and one of the last remaining ancient Silk Road caravanserais at Tash Rabat. Here you can go for walks, or ride one of the local’s horses, all the while staying in one of the traditional yurts while Nazira and her family look after you. People often ask me, where is my favourite place in the world – well, this is right up there; sitting on the hills above the valley is one of the most peaceful settings I know.
From here most will either head over the border to China and the famous Silk Road crossroads town of Kashgar or west across the mountains to another jewel in the Kyrgyz crown, Lake Son Kul. A 3,000 metre high glacial lake, some 40 kilometres in length, again it offers a great place to walk or ride among the hills and meet more of the locals.
As you head further west so you can cross the sensational Ferghana range and visit the region around the Tajik border – particularly travelling up to Peak Lenin base camp – or head down into the Ferghana Valley and the ancient Silk Road town of Osh. Many of our trips come this way as they head into neighbouring Uzbekistan, but continuing on the circuit back round towards Bishkek and you come to yet another wonderful region of natural beauty, Sary Chelek National Park.
At Wild Frontiers we run both small group tours and tailor-made holidays to Kyrgyzstan. While some trips focus solely on this country, others take in Kyrgyzstan on longer journeys through this Silk Road region. It’s also the place that we run one of our best horse riding adventures; loosely following the route I took back in 1999, for those interested in equine holidays, this trip is simply sensational.
As you can see, as far as natural mountain beauty is concerned Kyrgyzstan is unrivalled in the region. It is a country with few political issues, a place with good tourist infrastructure and yet relatively few tourist. It’s a place where you can walk, ride, mountain bike, raft or heli-trek – with us, all on a single trip! – and as of 2012 there are no visa requirements for British and many other nationalities.
As I say when I rode through the country 15 years ago, I knew I had discovered a gem…and so it is today. Kyrgyzstan really is one of adventure travels best kept secrets.

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Khiva Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video on Khiva Uzbekistan! Khiva was my last stop during my cent...

Khiva Uzbekistan Travel

Thank you for watching my video on KhivaUzbekistan! Khiva was my last stop during my central Asia travel. It's a mysterious and old city with a lot of history. It is one of the main cities along the silk road in central Asia in Uzbekistan. Khiva was one of the most unique places I have ever visited and it was well worth the travel to get there.
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
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UZBEKISTAN Travel Tips

Thank you for watching my video on travel tips for Uzbekistan! Uzbekistan is an amazing country that is still a bit mysterious to a lot of people. I hope this video sheds some light on what it's like traveling around the country of Uzbekistan as a solo traveler and in general. Feel free to leave an comments or questions down below and I will do my best to answer them ^^
Welcome to my channel! I'm Patrick! I'm an English teacher in South Korea. I love to travel and I'm also a travel vlogger. I live and work on Jeju islandKorea where I do most of my travel videos. I will be starting a long travel trip during the summer of 2017 and will be visiting many countries! Feel free to subscribe and send me any questions you may have! Weekly videos uploaded every week! ^_-
Join me, Pat, in living every moment to the Max!!
STANTOURS: http://www.stantours.com/ca_index.html
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Checkout my last video on KHIVA UZBEKISTAN! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8zOD0Yi27g&t=41s
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Recorded with: SonyHDR AS3000 Action Cam

We are a travel expedition co. handling all operations by own with personal experience of travelling into different part of world.
We offer fixed departure group tours of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. If you want to book a tour. You can contact us via comments.

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